Publication | Closed Access
Real-time dynamics of strongly correlated fermions using auxiliary field quantum Monte Carlo
12
Citations
65
References
2021
Year
Quantum DynamicQuantum Lattice SystemEngineeringMany-body Quantum PhysicDifferent LatticesStrongly Correlated Electron SystemsComputational ChemistryQuantum ComputingQuantum SimulationBiophysicsQuantum SciencePhysicsMonte CarloReal-time DynamicsQuantum Field TheoryAtomic PhysicsQuantum ChemistryNatural SciencesMonte Carlo MethodApplied PhysicsDisordered Quantum SystemReal-time AfqmcCorrelated Electrons
Spurred by recent technological advances, there is a growing demand for computational methods that can accurately predict the dynamics of correlated electrons. Such methods can provide much-needed theoretical insights into the electron dynamics probed via time-resolved spectroscopy experiments and observed in non-equilibrium ultracold atom experiments. In this article, we develop and benchmark a numerically exact Auxiliary Field Quantum Monte Carlo (AFQMC) method for modeling the dynamics of correlated electrons in real time. AFQMC has become a powerful method for predicting the ground state and finite temperature properties of strongly correlated systems mostly by employing constraints to control the sign problem. Our initial goal in this work is to determine how well AFQMC generalizes to real-time electron dynamics problems without constraints. By modeling the repulsive Hubbard model on different lattices and with differing initial electronic configurations, we show that real-time AFQMC is capable of accurately capturing long-lived electronic coherences beyond the reach of mean field techniques. While the times to which we can meaningfully model decrease with increasing correlation strength and system size as a result of the exponential growth of the dynamical phase problem, we show that our technique can model the short-time behavior of strongly correlated systems to very high accuracy. Crucially, we find that importance sampling, combined with a novel adaptive active space sampling technique, can substantially lengthen the times to which we can simulate. These results establish real-time AFQMC as a viable technique for modeling the dynamics of correlated electron systems and serve as a basis for future sampling advances that will further mitigate the dynamical phase problem.
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